Zeus was allotted the dominion of the sky, having waged war
against Cronos
and the TITANS
[see also Titanomachy].
This supreme god surpasses all others in spirit, wisdom, and
justice, and prevails upon good men by persuasion, intimidating the
evil by punishment. Zeus, some say, caused the Trojan
War, so that the load of death might empty the world. Zeus got
the thunderbolt, his ultimate weapon, from the CYCLOPES,
and an eagle brings back the thunderbolts which he has flung.
|
|
|
Birth and clandestine infancy |
Both Gaia and Uranus
foretold Cronos
that he would be dethroned by his own son. To avoid this sad fate,
he used to swallow his children at birth. This bizarre behaviour,
however, enraged his wife Rhea 1,
who being pregnant with Zeus, went to Crete and
gave him birth in a cave of Dicte.
NYMPHS
fed the child on the milk of the goat Amalthea while the CURETES in
arms guarded the child in the cave, clashing their spears on their
shields, in order to prevent Cronos to
hear his voice. In the meantime, Rhea 1
wrapped a stone in clothes and gave it to Cronos to
swallow, as if it were the newborn child. This is how Cronos,
the second ruler of the universe, was deceived. |
Amalthea and other nurses |
Amalthea, some say, was one of ZEUS' NURSES. She was a naiad,
famous in the Cretan Mount Ida, who nursed Zeus when the newborn god
had to be concealed and protected from his father Cronos,
who, out of fear for being dethroned by his own son (as it had been
predicted), devoured his offspring. Amalthea hung Zeus in a cradle
from a tree, so that he could be found neither in heaven nor on
earth nor in the sea, and gathering youths, she gave them brazen
shields and spears, and ask them to go around the tree making noise
lest the cries of little Zeus be
heard. These youths are called CURETES by some whereas others called
them CORYBANTES.
It has also been said that the nymph Amalthea owned a bull's horn
which could supply food and drink in abundance. However, some affirm that Amalthea owned a
wonderful she-goat who suckled the god, and that one day the goat
broke one of her beautiful horns. The nymph Amalthea then picked it
up, and wrapping it in fresh herbs, took it full of fruit to the
lips of the newborn god. Because of this, on becoming ruler of
heaven, Zeus transformed both his nurse and the horn of plenty into
stars.
Yet some assert that Zeus was given to the care of Adrastia 1 and
Ide 3, daughters of King Melisseus 1 in Crete, who
laid him in a cradle of gold, and since they had not milk for the
child, they furnished him a goat, whose name was Amalthea. But
others affirm that Amalthea was the nymph who owned the goat that
nursed Zeus.
The Messenians affirm that it was Neda, the eldest of the NYMPHS,
who reared Zeus secretly; but many others are said to have nursed
Zeus as well. |
Zeus becomes ruler of Heaven |
When Zeus was grown up, he asked Metis 1 to help him against his
father, and she gave Cronos a
drug that forced him to disgorge first the stone and then the
children whom he had swallowed. And with the aid of his brothers and
sisters, Zeus waged war against Cronos
and the TITANS,
and being victorious, Zeus became the ruler of Heaven [see also Titanomachy].
|
Metis 1 |
Metis 1 turned into many shapes to avoid Zeus' embraces, but she
nevertheless became his first wife. Gaia had
prophesied that after giving birth to the maiden who was in her
womb, Metis 1 would bear a son who would be the lord of heaven.
Fearing the prophecy, Zeus swallowed Metis 1. And when the time came
for the birth to take place, Prometheus
1, or else Hephaestus
smote the head of Zeus with an axe, and Athena,
fully armed, leapt up from the top of his head at the river Triton.
|
Conflict with Prometheus
1 |
Prometheus
1 gave mankind fire, which, unknown to Zeus, he had hidden in a
stalk of fennel. But having learned about the theft, Zeus had him
nailed in Mount Caucasus, where every day an eagle swooped on him
and devoured the lobes of his liver, which grew by night. |
Impious Lycaon 2
|
It is told that Zeus, desirous of putting the impiety of King Lycaon 2
of Arcadia
and his sons to the test, came to them in the likeness of a
day-labourer. Having slaughtered a male child, they mixed his bowels
with the sacrifices, and set them before him. Zeus in disgust killed
him and his sons. Because of their impiety, it is said, there
occurred The Flood
in the age of Deucalion
1. Zeus transformed Lycaon 2
into a wolf, or blasted him and his sons with a thunderbolt.
|
The
Flood of Deucalion
1 |
When Zeus then decided to destroy the men of the Bronze
Age, he poured heavy rain and flooded the world so that all men
were destroyed, except a few [see The
Flood]. |
Amour impossible |
Zeus also loved the nereid Thetis, but Themis prophesied that her
son would be mightier than his father, and he withdrew. Zeus then
bade his grandson Peleus to
marry her, and in time Achilles
was born, who was indeed mightier than his father. |
Ate thrown away |
Ate, who is Delusion and Ruinous Conduct, was held responsible by
Zeus for the blindness with which he took a solemn oath, and in his
rage he seized her by her hair, and whirling her round his head cast
her down to the world, swearing that she should never set foot in
Olympus again. [This oath refers to the birth of Heracles
1; see Alcmena below. For Ate see ABSTRACTIONS.]
|
Hephaestus
expelled |
Zeus cast Hephaestus
out of heaven, because he came to the rescue of Hera once
she had a fight with her husband. Hephaestus
fell on Lemnos,
and for that reason he is lamed of his legs. |
Ganymedes
in exchange for beautiful horses |
For the sake of Ganymedes'
beauty, Zeus caught him up on an eagle, and ever since he is the
cupbearer of the gods in heaven. In compensation for the rape of Ganymedes,
Zeus gave some fine mares to King Laomedon 1 of Troy.
|
Sun sets in the East by the will of Zeus |
At the time when the brothers Atreus
and Thyestes 1 disputed about the kingdom of Mycenae,
Zeus sent Hermes to
Atreus
to make him stipulate with Thyestes 1 that Atreus
should be king if the sun should go backwards; and when Thyestes 1,
believing it impossible, agreed, the sun set in the east. Thus Atreus
got the kingdom. |
Another miracle performed by Zeus |
Callirrhoe 2 requested of Zeus that the sons she had by Alcmaeon
1 might be full-grown in order to avenge their father's murder, and
they suddenly became grown-up [see also Robe &
Necklace of Harmonia 1]. |
Zeus takes part in the birth of Orion
|
Hyrieus was childless and asked the gods Zeus, Hermes,
and Poseidon,
who came to visit him, for children, and they urinated in the hide
of the sacrificed bull, buried it in the earth and from it Orion was
born. |
CYPRIAN CENTAURS |
Some say that this horned generation of CENTAURS came to be
because Zeus chased Aphrodite
but could not catch her. In the pursuit the god dropped his seed on
the ground, and these CYPRIAN CENTAURS grew out of the earth. [See
also the regular CENTAURS]
|
Immortality in exchange for maidenhood |
Juturna became a goddess of lakes and rivers in return for the
maidenhood Zeus ravished. But the naiad Lara, also called Tacita,
who could not hold her tongue, reported to Hera that
Zeus loved Juturna. For this, Zeus wrenched from her the indiscreet
tongue, and told Hermes to
take her to Hades
as she was to become an infernal nymph. |
Because of an opinion one kind of vision turns into another
|
Tiresias
was blinded by Hera for
saying that women enjoy the pleasures of love ten times more than
men, but was given by Zeus the art of soothsaying which he kept even
in the Underworld.
|
Ixion
deluded |
Ixion was
in love with Hera and
attempted to rape her, but Zeus then made the Cloud Resembling Hera
(Nephele 1) to delude him [see CENTAURS].
For this attempt Ixion is
punished in the Underworld
[see also Immortals].
|
Love and sleep may distract the gods |
When once Hera, for
the sake of helping the Achaeans in the Trojan
War, wished to keep Zeus away from the battles, she received Aphrodite's
magic belt from this goddess, and with its help and her own charms
she was able to distract her husband. Later on, with the help of Hypnos
(Sleep), whom she bribed, Zeus was conveniently put to sleep. Hypnos
dared this deed in spite of his fears. For some time ago he had
performed, also at Hera's
request, a similar task; and Zeus, who then woke up in anger and
sought him everywhere, would have hurled him from heaven into the
deep, had not her mother Nyx (Night)
saved him. |
|
|
Attacks against the rule of
Zeus |
The ALOADS |
The rule of Zeus was not beyond threat:
Ephialtes 2 and Otus 1, two giants called the ALOADS tried to
unseat Zeus from his throne. The ALOADS grew every year a cubit in
breadth and a fathom in height; and when they were nine years old,
being nine cubits broad and nine fathoms high, they resolved to
fight against the gods. They then set Ossa on Olympus, and having
set Pelion on Ossa they threatened by means of these mountains to
ascend up to heaven. They also declared that by filling up the sea
with the mountains they would make it dry land, and the land they
would make sea.
Ephialtes 2 wooed Hera, and
Otus 1 wooed Artemis;
and they put Ares in
bonds. But when they wished to assault Artemis
and she could not resist their strength, Apollo
sent a deer between them. So driven mad by anger in trying to kill
it with javelins, they killed each other. But others assert that Artemis
caused their death; that she changed herself into a deer and leaped
between them, and in their eagerness to hit the quarry they threw
their darts at each other.
In the Underworld
they are punished thus: they are bound by serpents to a column, back
to back. Between them is a screech-owl, sitting on the column to
which they are bound. |
The Revolt of the GIANTS
|
Also the serpent-footed GIANTS,
who had a thousand hands and were matchless in size and invincible
in their might, tried to dethrone Zeus. This happened because Gaia was
vexed after the OLYMPIANS
had defeated the TITANS.
She then gave birth to GIANTS so
that they would attack heaven. As an oracle had said that none of
the GIANTS
could perish at the hands of the gods, but that with the help of a
mortal they could be killed, the gods summoned Heracles
1 to their aid, and the GIANTS
were destroyed [see also Gigantomachy].
|
Typhon |
But then winged Typhon attacked heaven spouting fire from his
mouth.
This hybrid monster, whose eyes flashed with fire, had human
shape but from the thighs downward he had huge coils of vipers,
which when drawn out, reached to his very head and emitted a loud
hissing. This came to be because when the OLYMPIANS
had overcome the GIANTS,
Gaia,
still more enraged, had intercourse with Tartarus
and gave birth to Typhon, who surpassed all her offspring in both
size and strength. Typhon's size was such that he out-topped all the
mountains and brushed the stars with his head, his hands reaching
out, one to the west and the other to the east, and from them
projected a hundred dragons' heads.
Typhon, hurling kindled rocks, attacked heaven with hissings and
shouts, spouting a great jet of fire from his mouth. So when the
gods saw him rushing at heaven, they made for Egypt in flight. Being
pursued they changed their forms into those of animals. However,
Zeus pelted Typhon at a distance with thunderbolts, and at close
quarters struck him down with an adamantine sickle, and as he fled
pursued him closely as far as Mount Casius, which overhangs Syria.
But Typhon wrested the sickle from him, severed the sinews of his
hands and feet, and lifting him on his shoulders carried him through
the sea to Cilicia, and deposited him on arrival in the Corycian
cave. Likewise, he put away the sinews there also, hidden in a
bearskin, and he set to guard them the she-dragon Delphyne, who was
a half-bestial maiden. It was then that Hermes
and Aegipan 1 stole the sinews and fitted them unobserved to Zeus.
Having recovered his strength, Zeus pelted Typhon with thunderbolts
and pursued him to the mountain called Nysa, where the MOERAE
beguiled the fugitive. They made him taste of the ephemeral fruits
in the persuasion that he would be strengthened thereby. So being
again pursued when he started to flee through the Sicilian sea, Zeus
cast Mount Etna in Sicily upon him. That is a huge mountain, from
which down to this day they say that blasts of fire issue from the
thunderbolts that were thrown. |
Conspiracy in Olympus |
A minor conspiracy once took place in Olympus when Hera, Poseidon,
and Athena
plotted against Zeus and planned to throw him into chains. It was
the nereid Thetis, Achilles'
mother, who then saved Zeus by calling to Olympus the Hecatoncheire
Briareus, who squatted by Zeus and displaying his force frightened
the other gods away. |
|
| |
Mates |
Offspring |
Notes |
|
[Sources refer mainly to children. Abbreviations]
|
Aegina |
Aeacus
|
["a)", "b)", etc. = different versions]
Aegina, daughter of the river god Asopus, was carried off by
Zeus, who had taken the shape of an eagle, to the island then named
Oenone but now called Aegina after her. Asopus came to Corinth
looking for his daughter and learned from Sisyphus
that the ravisher was Zeus. Asopus pursued him, but Zeus, by hurling
thunderbolts, sent him away to his own streams. And Sisyphus
is ever since being punished in the Underworld
for having disclosed Zeus' secret concerning the abduction of
Aegina.
Aegina gave birth to Aeacus,
who became king of the island of Aegina. But as there were no men,
Zeus transformed ANTS into men to populate the island. Aeacus
joined Dionysus
2 in his war against India, and as the pious man he was, he
delivered Hellas from the dearth through prayers [see also: Psamathe
1 at NEREIDS].
Aeacus
keeps, since his death, the keys of Underworld.
|
Boetis |
Aegipan 2 |
Boetis was a she-goat.
Hyg.Fab.155. |
a) Protogenia 1 |
Aethlius |
Protogenia 1 is a daughter of Deucalion
1.
Aethlius became the first ruler of Elis.
Apd.1.7.2, 1.7.5; Hes.CWE.8; Hyg.Fab.155; Pau.5.1.3, 5.8.2.
|
b) Calyce 1 |
Calyce 1 is a daughter of Aeolus
1. |
Protogenia 1 |
Aetolus 4 |
Hyg.Fab.155. |
--- |
Agdistis |
Agdistis was a demon with two sexual organs, male and female. The
gods cut off the male organ and an almond tree grew up from it, the
fruit of which was taken by Sangarius' Daughter who became pregnant.
Agdistis is born from Zeus' Seed.
Pau.7.17.10. |
Antiope 3 |
|
Antiope 1 was loved by Zeus and gave birth to twins: Amphion
1 and Zethus, who became rulers in Thebes.
Zeus took the shape of a Satyr to approach her.
Apd.1.9.10, 3.5.5-6; Eur.Her.29; Hes.CWE.96; Hom.Il.24.602.ff.;
Hom.Od.11.283; Hyg.Fab.11; Ov.Met.6.271; Pau.2.21.9, 9.5.8, 9.36.10;
Stat.Theb.1.10, 2.455; Strab.8.4.4. |
Zethus |
Apd.3.5.5-6; Eur.Her.29; Hom.Od.19.518ff.; Pau.9.5.9. |
|
Dione 1 | |
|
|
Leto |
|
Because Zeus made love to Leto, she
was hunted over the whole earth by Hera, until
she came to Delos where she gave birth to Apollo
and Artemis.
|
|
|
Arcas 1 |
Zeus seduced Callisto
taking the shape of Artemis.
Zeus, who did not wished to be detected by Hera
transformed her into a bear, but Hera told
Artemis
to shoot the wild beast. However some say that Artemis
shot the bear because Callisto
had not kept her promise concerning her maidenhood, and that it was
Hera who
turned her into a bear. When Callisto
died Zeus took the baby Arcas 1 and gave him to Maia for upbringing.
Callisto
he transformed into the constellation of the Great Bear [Ursa
Major]. The district of Arcadia
was named after Arcas 1.
Apd.3.8.2, 3.9.1; Hyg.Ast.2.4; Hyg.Fab.224; Nonn.13.296;
Pau.5.1.4, 8.4.1-2, 8.9.9, 8.24.1, 10.9.5. |
--- |
Arcisius |
Arcisius is Odysseus'
grandfather.
Apd.1.9.16; Hom.Od.16.118; Hyg.Fab.189; Ov.Met.13.143. |
|
|
|
|
Ilithyia |
For Ilithyia see Other
Deities and main text above. |
Niobe 1 |
Argus 5 |
Niobe 1 was the first mortal woman with whom Zeus consorted. She
is a daughter of Phoroneus,
who is said to be the first man. Argus 5 became king and called the
Peloponnesus after himself Argos.
Apd.2.1.1-3; Pau.2.16.1, 2.26.2, 2.25.8. |
Pelasgus 1 |
The inhabitants of the Peloponnesus were called Pelasgians after
Pelasgus 1. Otherwise he is remembered as the king of Argos to
whom the DANAIDS
came.
Aes.Supp.250 and passim; Apd.2.1.1, 3.8.1; DH.1.11.2; Pau.8.22.1.
|
Eurynome 3 |
Asopus |
Eurynome 3, counted among the OCEANIDS,
is said to have ruled Olympus together with Ophion 1 until Cronos
and Rhea
1 replaced them. Asopus is one of the RIVER
GODS. |
|
|
|
Astraea |
For Astraea see ABSTRACTIONS.
|
HORAE |
|
MOERAE
|
|
--- |
Ate |
For Ate see ABSTRACTIONS.
|
--- |
|
|
Cassiopea 1 |
Atymnius 1 |
Atymnius 1 is known because the children of Europa
fell in love with him.
Apd.3.1.2. |
Carme |
Britomartis |
Britomartis (Aphaea, Dictynna, Laphria), fled from King Minos 2
of Crete,
leapt into the sea from the top of a cliff and fell into the nets of
fishermen, which saved her. She was made a goddess by Artemis.
|
--- |
Caerus 2
|
"Opportunity", called "the youngest child of Zeus".
Pau.5.14.9; Call.6. |
|
Ceroessa |
Nonn.32.70. |
Epaphus 1 |
Zeus seduced Io while she
held the priesthood of Hera, but
being detected by Hera he
turned Io
into a white cow by a touch and swore that he had not known her
(consequently it has been remarked that a lover's oaths do not draw
down the anger of the gods).
Epaphus 1 was King of Egypt and founder of the city of Memphis.
From him sprang the Libyans and the Ethiopians.
Aes.Supp.48; Apd.2.1.3-4, 2.5.11; Eur.Phoe.676, Hes.CW.40a;
Hyg.Fab.149; Nonn.3.284, Strab.10.1.3. |
--- |
Clarus |
Clarus was a companion of Aeneas in
Italy.
Vir.Aen.10.125. |
Hora 2 |
Colaxes |
Hora 2's body was half-human and half-snake. Colaxes was a
chieftain in the army of Perses 3 during the civil war in Colchis
between Perses 3 and Aeetes.
He was killed by Jason,
Captain of the ARGONAUTS.
Val.6.48ff., 6.651ff. |
--- |
Corinthus |
Corinthus was King of Corinth.
After him the Corinthian land is named. As he died childless the
Corinthians sent for Medea.
Apd.3.16.2; Pau.2.1.1, 2.3.10. |
Calliope |
CORYBANTES
|
Calliope is the eldest of the MUSES.
|
--- |
Crinacus |
Crinacus is father of Macar 1, King of Lesbos.
Dio.5.81.4. |
Himalia |
Cronius 2 |
Dio.5.55.6. |
Cytus |
|
Spartaeus |
Dio.5.55.6. |
Electra 3 |
Dardanus 1 |
Electra 3 is the one of the PLEIADES
who does not appear because of the death of Dardanus 1 and the loss
of Troy. Dardanus 1 grieved at his brother Iasion's death, left
Samothrace and came to the country where the Teucrians dwelt, and
called it Dardania.
Apd.3.12.1-2; Col.286; DH.1.50.3, 1.61.2; Dio.4.75.1, 5.48.2;
Hyg.Fab.155; Hyg.Ast.2.21; Nonn.3.195; Ov.Fast.4.31, 4.33; QS.2.141,
13.558; Vir.Aen.8.134. |
Emathion 4 |
Emathion 4 became King of Samothrace after his brother Dardanus
1.
Nonn.3.186, 13.395. |
Harmonia 1 |
See Robe
& Necklace of Harmonia 1.
Apd.3.4.2, 3.5.4; Dio.5.48.2; Eur.Bacc.1357; Hes.The.975;
Nonn.3.375ff., 4.61, 5.101. |
Iasion |
For Iasion see Demeter.
Apd.3.12.1; DH.1.61.2-4; Dio.5.48.2; Hes.The.970; Hom.Od.5.125;
Hyg.Ast.2.4, 2.22; Hyg.Fab.250, 270; Nonn.48.678; Strab.Fra.7.49.
|
|
|
Zeus fell in love with Semele
and consorted with her, but Semele
died, some say, because of the jealousy of Hera.
However, after Semele's
death Zeus carried the unborn child, Dionysus
2, in his thigh. |
|
|
Polydeuces and Castor 1 are the DIOSCURI.
Zeus in the form of a swan consorted with Leda, and
on the same night Tyndareus
lay with her. Polydeuces and Helen,
children of Zeus, were born from an egg laid by Leda and
Castor 1 and Clytaemnestra
were children of Tyndareus.
But some say that Helen was
a daughter of Nemesis
and Zeus and that a shepherd found the egg and brought it to Leda and
when Helen was
hatched in due time, Leda
suckled and nursed her and brought her up. |
Calyce 1 |
|
See also Olympia,
Elis, Aeolus
1, and Selene.
Apd.1.7.5-7; Hes.GE.11; Nonn.7.239, 48.581; Pau.5.1.4. |
Pandora 2 |
Graecus |
Pandora 2 is daughter of Deucalion
1 & Pyrrha 1. After Graecus were called Greeks those who
followed Hellenic customs.
Hes.CWE.2. |
Latinus 3 |
After Latinus 3 the Latins were called.
Hes.CWE.2. |
|
|
See Leda above
in this list. |
b) Nemesis
|
c) Oceanid |
Pyrrha 1 |
Hellen 1 |
Hellen 1 named Hellenes those who were called Greeks. He is
father of Aeolus
1, Dorus 1 and Xuthus 1.
Apd.1.7.2-3; Dio.4.60.2; Hes.CWE.4; Hyg.Fab.155; Strab.8.7.1,
9.5.6. |
Alcmena
|
|
Alcmena
was the last mortal woman with whom Zeus lay. Zeus took the form of
Amphitryon
(her husband) to deceive her. When Heracles
1, Zeus' child by her, was about to be born, Zeus declared among
the gods that the descendant of Perseus
1 then about to be born would reign over Mycenae,
and Hera, out
of jealousy, persuaded Ilithyia to retard Alcmena's
delivery, and contrived that Eurystheus
should be born a seven-month child, and thus he became king of Mycenae.
|
Lysithoe |
Heracles 4 |
Heracles 4 was born very much earlier than Heracles
1. Because both bore the same name the deeds of Heracles 4 were
transferred to Heracles
1.
Cic.ND.3.42; Dio.5.76.2. |
Asteria 1 |
Heracles 6 |
Asteria 1 tried in vain to escape the amorous advances of Zeus
and was turned into a quail by him. Heracles 6, chiefly worshipped
at Tyre, is father of the Tyrian Nymph Carthago.
Cic.ND.3.42. |
Maia |
|
Maia is one of the PLEIADES.
|
Nymph 13 African |
Iarbas |
For Iarbas see Aeneas
and NYMPHS.
Ov.Fast.3.552; Vir.Aen.4.36, 4.198. |
Taygete |
Lacedaemon |
Taygete is one of the PLEIADES.
She is known for having consecrated to Artemis
the Cerynitian Hind with the golden horns that Heracles
1 had to fetch. The country Lacedaemon is called after
Lacedaemon. He succeeded Eurotas in the throne of Laconia and Sparta.
Apd.3.10.3; Hyg.Ast.2.21; Pau.3.1.1. |
--- |
Lamus 3 |
Father of the NYMPHS
LAMUSIDES who were to take care of the child Dionysus
2, but were maddened by Hera.
Nonn.9.28ff. |
--- |
LITAE |
See ABSTRACTIONS.
|
Thyia 2 |
Macedon |
Thyia 2 is a daughter of Deucalion
1 & Pyrrha 1. The district of Macedonia takes its name from
Macedon.
Hes.CWE.3. |
Magnes 1 |
Magnes 1 was father, among other children, of Polydectes 1, who
colonized Seriphus and there became King, fell in love with Danae and
sent Perseus
1 to bring the head of Medusa
1.
Apd.1.3.3, 1.7.3, 1.9.6; Hes.CWE.3; Pau.6.21.11. |
|
Manes |
Manes was the first king of Lydia.
DH.1.27.1-2; Hdt.1.94, 4.45. |
Nymph 8 Sithnid |
Megarus |
Megarus is known for having escaped the Flood in
the age of Deucalion
1.
Pau.1.40.1. |
Othris |
Meliteus |
For Othris and Meliteus see NYMPHS.
Lib.Met.13. |
|
|
Zeus fell in love with a Phoenician princess called Europa
and having taken the form of a bull, Zeus carried her off and took
her across the sea to the island of Crete. She
bore sons who became famous both in this world and in the next, for
Minos
2 became king of Crete and,
since his death, delivers judgement to the dead in Hades,
while Rhadamanthys acts as a judge in Hades,
along with his brother and Aeacus
[see also Crete, Minotaur
and Robe
& Necklace of Harmonia 1]. |
Rhadamanthys |
See also Underworld.
Apd.2.4.11, 3.1.1-2; Pin.Oly.2.70; Hes.CW.19a; Hom.Od.4.564;
Hyg.Fab.155; Lib.Met.33; Pau.7.3.6, 8.53.4-5. |
|
|
Zeus also changed his form when he consorted with Mnemosyne,
assuming that of a shepherd. Mnemosyne
(Memory), mother of the MUSES,
discovered the uses of the power of reason and gave a designation to
every object. |
Eurymedusa 2 |
Myrmidon |
Zeus approached Eurymedusa 2, daughter of Cletor, after having
assumed the form of an ant. Their son is the eponym of the
Myrmidons, the people living in Thessaly who later followed Achilles
to the Trojan
War.
Clem.EG.2.34p. |
--- |
Nephele 1 |
This is a Cloud Resembling Hera
fashioned by Zeus to delude Ixion [see
also CENTAURS].
Apd.Ep.1.20; Dio.4.12.6, 4.69.5, 4.70.1; Ov.Met.9.123, 12.210,
12.504; Pin.Pyth.2.21ff. |
Dino |
NYMPHS
|
|
Hybris |
|
|
|
Pandia |
It is said of Pandia that she was exceedingly lovely among the
deathless gods.
Hom.Sel.32.15. |
a) Styx |
|
For Styx see Underworld.
|
|
|
|
|
When Danae's
father inquired the oracle, the god said that Danae
would give birth to a son who would kill him. Fearing that, he built
a brazen chamber under ground and there guarded Danae. But
Zeus had intercourse with her in the shape of a stream of gold which
poured through the roof into Danae's
lap and, in time, Perseus
1, founder of Mycenae,
was born. |
--- |
Phasis 1 |
Phasis 1 is one of the RIVER
GODS. |
Dia |
|
|
Nymphe 2 |
Saon 2 |
Saon 2 (Samon) was a Samothracian, the first settler of the
island, which was called after him and the name of Thrace.
Pau.9.40.2. |
|
Sarpedon 1 |
Sarpedon 1 became King of Lycia and Zeus granted him life for
three generations. Nevertheless he was killed by Patroclus
1 during the Trojan
War.
Apd.3.1.1-2; Apd.Ep.3.34ff., 4.6; Dio.5.79.3; Hes.CW.19a;
Hom.Il.16.502; Hyg.Fab.112; QS.4.290; Try.25; Vir.Aen.9.697, 10.470.
|
b) Laodamia 1 |
Laodamia 1 is daughter of Bellerophon.
|
Lamia 1 |
Sibyl 1 |
Sibyl is a surname, but this is the first woman who chanted the
oracles at Delphi.
Pau.10.12.1. |
Pluto 3 |
|
|
Borysthenes' Daughter |
Targitaus |
Targitaus is considered to be the first of the Scythians.
Hdt.4.5-7. |
--- |
Themon |
A companion of Aeneas in
Italy.
Vir.Aen.10.125. |
Elare |
Tityus |
Zeus seduced Elare but he hid her under the earth for fear of Hera's
jealousy. Tityus, who was of a huge size, is known for having lifted
the robe of Leto and
attempted to rape her. Leto's
children, Apollo
and Artemis
killed him. He is still being punished in Hades
[see Immortals].
Apd.1.4.1; Cal.Ar.110; Hes.CWE.25; Hom.Od.7.324, 11.576;
Hyg.Fab.14, 55; Nonn.4.331; Pin.Oly.4.46; Pin.Pyth.4.90;
Prop.2.21.31; QS.3.392; Stat.Theb.1.710, 4.538. |
--- |
Xanthus 5 |
One of the RIVER
GODS. |
|
Zagreus |
For Zagreus see Dionysus
2. Zeus approached Persephone
in the form of a spotted snake.
Dio.3.62.6-7, 3.64.1; Hyg.Fab.167; Nonn.5.565, 6.165, 6.169ff.
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